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  {
   "label": "Note(s)",
   "value": "\"Jedo\"- Jeddo and Yedo are anglicisations of Edo, the Japanese town and adjacent large bay; the name being commonly used by English-speaking people during the 1850s. After 1868, Edo was renamed as Tokyo."
  },
  {
   "label": "Technique(s)",
   "value": "Woodcut (process); Hand colouring"
  },
  {
   "label": "Medium",
   "value": "Ink"
  },
  {
   "label": "Title",
   "value": "Kōeki Oedo ezu"
  },
  {
   "label": "Project Information",
   "value": "<p>Japanese Maps Project<\/p><p>Erica Baffelli<\/p>"
  },
  {
   "label": "Publication",
   "value": "Edo: Okumura Kichibē, \u2026 [et al.]"
  },
  {
   "label": "Alternative Title(s)",
   "value": "広益御江戸絵図; Saikan kaisei kōeki oedo Ezu. Kan; 再刊改正広益御江戸絵図　完; Translated title: Greatly beneficial map of Edo"
  },
  {
   "label": "Physical Location",
   "value": "The John Rylands Library"
  },
  {
   "label": "Extent",
   "value": "Map height: 780 mm, width: 885 mm. Folded height: 157 mm, width: 101 mm."
  },
  {
   "label": "Classmark",
   "value": "Japanese 96"
  },
  {
   "label": "Subject(s)",
   "value": "Early maps--Japan; Japan--1700--1790; Edo--Tokyo--Kantō Region--Japan--Maps; Cartography--Japan--History--Maps; Tokugawa period, Japan, 1600-1868; Edo period, Japan, 1600-1868; Tokyo (Japan); Kantō Region (Japan)"
  },
  {
   "label": "Abstract",
   "value": "<p style='text-align: justify;'> Map of Edo, in Japanese. The title is reported in a mounted cover label, with the subtitles \"Saikan kaisei\" (Newly carved and revisioned) and \"Kan\" (complete). The colophon reports the date Tenmei 7 (1787) for this specific copy, specifying that the map was largely revised every month. The map was first published in the An\u2019ei era (1772-1781) or in the early Tenmei era (1781-1789). The colophon also reports the names of the publishers, all from Edo: Nishimura Kōhachi, Yamada Sanshirō and Okumura Kichibē. The map is oriented with north to the right. It is a wood block print, hand coloured, with relief shown pictorially. It is a single sheet with a section at the middle that drops down and is longer than the rest of the map: at its longest points, the height of the map is 780 mm and the width is 885 mm. It folds into original burnished patterned covers. <\/p><p style='text-align: justify;'> The map represents the whole city area, with the Honjo area (excluded in earlier maps) in the drop-down section, with roads highlighted in yellow, and major temple and shrine areas within the city and in its outskirts represented pictorially. It is highly detailed, with place-names associated to a number of elements on the maps, including Edo castle and its compounds, warrior mansions, governmental offices, city blocks, roads, major bridges, villages, temples and shrines, lakes, ponds and rivers. Family crests appear on the mansions of major warrior families, including the Tokugawa family crest on Edo castle and other buildings associated with the family. <\/p><p style='text-align: justify;'> The map follows the structural tradition established by Ochikochi Dōin, the author of the set of Edo maps known as \"Kanbun go-mai zu\" (Five-page map from the Kanbun era, 1661-1673), the first printed and published maps of Edo based on surveying. With the permission of Tokugawa authorities, the set was subsequently scaled down into a single sheet map of Edo with Edo castle at its centre, \"Shinpan Edo ōezu\" (Newly published large map of Edo, 1676; also recurring in different editions as \"Bunken Edo ōezu\", Measured large map of Edo). It also resulted in other adaptations, particularly Ishikawa Tomonobu\u2019s \"Edo zukan kōmoku\" (Outline map of Edo, 1689), which, in iconographical terms, departed significantly from the original model. While Edo\u2019s last significant structural change was brought about by the so-called Meireki fire of 1657, in fact, the social composition of the city changed significantly in the two following centuries (particularly with the growth of an urban consumer class, composed of both commoners and warriors), in a way that was reflected in the growing iconographical complexity of maps. <\/p><p style='text-align: justify;'> This specific map seems to be derivative of Ishikawa\u2019s model. The colophon is preceded by a postface and a legend, which illustrates the use of family crests to identify the mansions of the most powerful warrior families, and of different symbols for the mansions of lesser families. A plate lists routes and distances from Nihonbashi (a central area of Edo and the starting point of the Tōkaidō highway) to several temples and shrines. Cover description: beige burnished paper and flexible cover board; in the front, mounted cover title with black text on red label and white label (with the Library's call no.: Japanese 96) annotated (see also Notes) \u2018Jedo\u2019 in black ink and pencil, number \u201818\u2019 in black ink; in the back, mounted bookplate of Biblioteca Lindesiana (at the base of the bookplate in pencil is the notation: \"15/E\"). <\/p>"
  },
  {
   "label": "Bibliography",
   "value": "<div style='list-style-type: disc;'><div style='display: list-item; margin-left: 20px;'><a target='_blank' class='externalLink uom-purple' href='http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/643741491'>Kornicki, Peter F. \"The Japanese collection in the Bibliotheca-Lindesiana.\" Bulletin of the John Rylands University Library of Manchester 75.2 (1993): 209-300.<\/a><\/div><div style='display: list-item; margin-left: 20px;'><a target='_blank' class='externalLink uom-purple' href='http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/23205683'>Iida, Ryūichi; Tawara, Motoaki. Edozu no rekishi (History of Edo maps). Tokyo: Tsukiji Shokan (1988).<\/a><\/div><div style='display: list-item; margin-left: 20px;'><a target='_blank' class='externalLink uom-purple' href='http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/539182768'>Yonemoto, Marcia. Mapping Early Modern Japan. Space, Place and Culture in the Tokugawa Period, 1603-1868. Berkeley, University of California Press (2003): 17-26.<\/a><\/div><div style='display: list-item; margin-left: 20px;'><a target='_blank' class='externalLink uom-purple' href='http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/951906464'>Tamai, Tetsuo. \u201cThe Urban Landscape of Early Edo in an East Asian Context\u201d. Karen Wigen, Sugimoto Fumiko, and Cary Karacas (eds.), Cartographic Japan: A History in Maps. Chicago: University of Chicago Press (2016): 75-77.<\/a><\/div><div style='display: list-item; margin-left: 20px;'><a target='_blank' class='externalLink uom-purple' href='http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/951906464'>Toby, Ronald P. \u201cSpatial Visions of Status\u201d. Karen Wigen, Sugimoto Fumiko, and Cary Karacas (eds.), Cartographic Japan: A History in Maps. Chicago: University of Chicago Press (2016): 78-80.<\/a><\/div><div style='display: list-item; margin-left: 20px;'><a target='_blank' class='externalLink uom-purple' href='http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/951906464'>Waley, Paul. \u201cThe Social Landscape of Edo\u201d. Karen Wigen, Sugimoto Fumiko, and Cary Karacas (eds.), Cartographic Japan: A History in Maps. Chicago: University of Chicago Press (2016): 81-84.<\/a><\/div><div style='display: list-item; margin-left: 20px;'>Williams, Harold S. and Williams, Jean. Foreigners in Mikadoland. Rutland, Vermont and Tokyo, Japan: Charles E. Tuttle Company (1963). <\/div><\/div><br />"
  },
  {
   "label": "Material(s)",
   "value": "Paper"
  },
  {
   "label": "Place of Publication",
   "value": "Japan, Tokyo"
  },
  {
   "label": "Date of Publication",
   "value": "1787"
  },
  {
   "label": "Publisher",
   "value": "Nishimura, Kōhachi　西村, 興八; Yamada, Sanshirō　山田, 屋三四郎; Okumura, Kichibē　奥村, 吉兵衛"
  }
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